hi, i was interested if perl is still relevant in this day and age. Perl has been on the decline for a very long time now. Perl 6 (now named 'raku) not being backwards compatible with perl 5 code made the already small perl community even smaller by splitting it in half. A good example is lisp with it’s thousands of different dialects.

Is it still worth using or is it bound to legacy software forever? Like cobol.

  • dan@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    You mean the fact that you can have a hash called %foo, an array called @foo and a scalar called $foo all at the same time? I agree that’s a weird choice and there’s potential for insanity there, but it’s pretty easy to just not do that…

    20+ years of Perl experience and while Perl has a load of idiosyncrasies that make it harder to work with than other languages, I don’t think that particular one has ever caused a significant problem.

    • Kazumara@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      You mean the fact that you can have a hash called %foo, an array called @foo and a scalar called $foo all at the same time?

      Yes, exactly. Those definitions aren’t clashing, so they must have separate namespaces.

      it’s pretty easy to just not do that…

      I wouldn’t do that either, but my colleage apparently did. So far I’m having a harder time reading perl than writing it.

      • dan@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        The way it works is that there’s a symbol table entry for “foo” which has a slot for a hash, scalar, array, glob, etc.

        That leads to some super weird behaviour like, for example, if I declare a scalar, hash and array as “x”:

        $x = "sy";
        %x = (foo => "mb");
        @x = ("ol", "s!");
        

        You can access them all independently as you’re aware:

        say "x: ", $x, $x{foo}, @x; # Outputs:  x: symbols!
        

        But what’s really going to bake your noodle is I can assign the “x” symbol to something else like this:

        *z = *x;
        

        …and then the same thing works with z:

        say "z: ", $z, $z{foo}, @z; # Outputs:  z: symbols!
        

        Oneliner if you want to try it:

        perl -E '$x = "sy"; %x = (foo => "mb"); @x = ("ol", "s!"); say "x: ", $x, $x{foo}, @x; *z = *x; say "z: ", $z, $z{foo}, @z;'
        

        Congratulations! You now know more about one of Perl’s really weird internals than I’d wager most Perl programmers (I have literally never used any of the above for anything actually productive!)